the drawer.
"They came for the ponies today,"Victoriasaid. She sat on the narrow bed. Ned joined her, his back against the wall, his feet on the quilt.
"No more ponies," Ned said. "No more lake house for the summer. Do you know why? Speak up, you little bastard."
"Father is sick a lot and doesn't make as much money,"Victoriasaid. "Some days he doesn't go to the office at all."
"Know why he's sick, you little bastard?" Ned asked. "Talk where I can understand you."
"Grandmother said he's a drunk. Understand that all right?"
"He's sick because of your ugly face," Ned said.
"That's why people didn't vote for him, too,"Victoriasaid.
"Get out," Francis said. When he turned to open the door, Ned kicked him in the back. Francis tried to reach his kidney with both hands, which saved his fingers as Ned kicked him in the stomach.
"Oh, Ned,"Victoriasaid. "Oh, Ned."
Ned grabbed Francis by the ears and held him close to the mirror over the dressing table.
"That's why he's sick!" Ned slammed his face into the mirror. "That's why he's sick!" Slam. "That's why he's sick!" Slam. The mirror was smeared with blood and mucus. Ned let him go and he sat on the floor.Victorialooked at him, her eyes wide, holding her lower lip between her teeth. They left him there. His face was wet with blood and spit. His eyes watered from the pain, but he did not cry.
Chapter 28
Rain inChicagodrums through the night on the canopy over the open grave of Freddy Lounds.
Thunder jars Will Graham's pounding head as he weaves from the table to a bed where dreams coil beneath the pillow.
The old house aboveSt. Charles, shouldering the wind, repeats its long sigh over the hiss of rain against the windows and the bump of thunder.
The stairs are creaking in the dark. Mr. Dolarhyde is coming down them, his kimono whispering over the treads, his eyes wide with recent sleep.
His hair is wet and neatly combed. He has brushed his nails. He moves smoothly and slowly, carrying his concentration like a brimming cup.
Film beside his projector. Two subjects. Other reels are piled in the wastebasket for burning. Two left, chosen from the dozens of home movies he has copied at the plant and brought home to audition.
Comfortable in his reclining chair with a tray of cheese and fruit beside him, Dolarhyde settles in to watch.
The first film is a picnic from the Fourth of July weekend. A handsome family; three children, the father bull-necked, dipping into the pickle jar with his thick fingers. And the mother.
The best view of her is in the softball game with the neighbors' children. Only about fifteen seconds of her; she takes a lead off second base, faces the pitcher and the plate, feet apart ready to dash either way, her breasts swaying beneath her pullover as she leans forward from the waist. An annoying interruption as a child swings a bat. The woman again, walking back to tag up. She puts one foot on the boat cushion they use for a base and stands hip-shot, the thigh muscle tightening in her locked leg.
Over and over Dolarhyde watches the frames of the woman. Foot on the base, pelvis tilts, thigh muscle tightens under the cutoff jeans.
He freezes the last frame. The woman and her children. They are dirty and tired. They hug, and a dog wags among their legs.
A terrific crash of thunder clinks the cut crystal in Grandmother's tall cabinet. Dolarbyde reaches for a pear.
Thesecond film is in several segments. The title, The New House , is spelled out in pennies on a shirt cardboard above a broken piggy bank. It opens with Father pulling up the "For Sale" sign in the yard. He holds it up and faces the camera with an embarrassed grin. His pockets are turned out.
An unsteady long shot of Mother and three children on the front steps. It is a handsome house. A cut to the swimming pool. A child, sleek-headed and small, pads around to the diving board, leaving wet footprints on the tile. Heads bob in the water. A small dog paddles toward a daughter, his ears back, chin high, and the whites of his eyes showing.
Mother in the water holds to the ladder and looks up at the camera. Her curly black hair has the gloss of pelt, her bosom swelling shining wet above her suit, her legs wavy below the surface, scissoring.
Night. A badly exposed shot across the pool to the lighted hous; the lights reflected in the water.
Indoors and